Hagemeyer Chemical Co., Inc., William C. Hagemeyer, James C. Noyes and Meredith J. Beirne v. Insect-O-Lite Co., Inc

291 F.2d 696, 130 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 186, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 4152
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 20, 1961
Docket14211_1
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 291 F.2d 696 (Hagemeyer Chemical Co., Inc., William C. Hagemeyer, James C. Noyes and Meredith J. Beirne v. Insect-O-Lite Co., Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hagemeyer Chemical Co., Inc., William C. Hagemeyer, James C. Noyes and Meredith J. Beirne v. Insect-O-Lite Co., Inc, 291 F.2d 696, 130 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 186, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 4152 (6th Cir. 1961).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff-appellee, the Insect-O-Lite Co., Inc. (referred to herein as plaintiff), sued defendants-appellants, William C. Hagemeyer, James C. Noyes, Meredith J. Beirne and Hagemeyer Chemical Co., Inc., a corporation (hereinafter referred to as defendants) to obtain an injunction and damages for alleged infringement. *697 of plsiintiff’s registered trade-mark, “Insect-O-Lite” and for unfair competition. The product involved was a vapor lamp •containing insecticide crystals.

“The function and purpose of this article is to attract and destroy in.sects in homes and places of business. It is a relatively small item made of a plastic and composition material to be hung on the wall and .attached by cord to an electric * * plug.” (District Judge’s opinion.) [151 F.Supp. 831.]

On trial without a jury, the district .■judge found all defendants guilty of unfair competition, but held that plaintiff had failed to establish a case of trademark infringement. He awarded plaintiff $10,000 as compensatory damages, .$5,000 exemplary damages, and attorney fees of $4,500. Judgment ran against the individual defendants, Hagemeyer, Noyes and Beirne, as well as the corporate defendant Hagemeyer Chemical Co., Inc.

For some years prior to the events complained of, plaintiff had marketed the insecticide device under the trade name •of Insect-O-Lite. At one period during that time, defendants Noyes and Beirne, as partners operating under the name ■of Midwest Brokerage Company, were sales representatives for plaintiff’s Insect-O-Lite. Later such connection was terminated and defendant Beirne went to work for plaintiff as its salesman. Beirne continued as such an employee until some time in 1954. In September, 1954, defendants Hagemeyer, Noyes and Beirne organized the defendant corporation, Hagemeyer Chemical Co., Inc., for the purpose of manufacturing and marketing a product, found by the district .judge to be “a competitive vaporizer substantially identical in all physical and functional aspects with plaintiff’s Insect-O-Lite vaporizer.” The individual defendants were shareholders and officers of defendant Hagemeyer Chemical Co- ; Inc., which marketed its product under,' the trade name of Insect Light. After; Hagemeyer Chemical Co., Inc., had pur-', sued its competition with plaintiff for a few months, the complaint in this case was filed in the District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky on April 15, 1955. A preliminary injunction to enjoin further prosecution of such business by defendants was denied by the district judge, which denial was affirmed in this court on November 10, 1955. (Insect-O-Lite Company, Inc. v. Hagemeyer et al., 6 Cir., 226 F.2d 580).

On May 17, 1957, the district judge, after taking of testimony on the question of liability, filed an Opinion and Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. In such decision, he exonerated the defendants of the charged infringement of plaintiff’s trade-mark Insect-O-Lite, but found all defendants guilty of unfair competition and ordered that plaintiff should receive its damages therefor. In an order of May 20, 1957, the district judge recited that by agreement of the parties, “the matter of damages was deferred until the rights of the parties on the matter of trade-mark infringement and unfair competition was determined as to both fact and law” and concluded such order by saying, “This case is set down for consideration of and entry of further orders at Covington, Kentucky, on May 27, 1957.” Thereafter, both parties employed various procedural steps, followed by the taking of evidence on damages. On February 23, 1960, the district judge filed a final Memorandum, with Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, upon which Judgment was entered. We recite the foregoing to dispose of appellee’s contention here that the district judge’s Opinion, Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, entered May 17, 1957, amounted to a final appealable order on all questions of liability, and that on the instant appeal, appellants are limited to an attack upon the amount of damages and costs awarded. We are satisfied that the foregoing review of the procedural stages of this litigation demonstrates .that the judgment of February 23, 1960, .was the only appealable order entered in this case subsequent to the district *698 judge’s denial of a preliminary injunction to plaintiff. All questions raised by appellants on this appeal are properly before us.

Appellants’ statement of questions involved presents their claim of six grounds for reversal. The first five of these deal with the amount of damages awarded, a challenge to the court’s jurisdiction, the weight of evidence, denial of their motion to introduce newly discovered evidence, and the denial of their motion to file certain additional counterclaims. After a review of the record on appeal, we find no merit in any of these contentions and a discussion of them would serve no purpose here. Except on the subject hereinafter discussed, the district judge’s Findings of Fact are not clearly erroneous. We find no abuse in discretionary matters. The amount of the awards of damages and attorney fees were within limits permitted by the evidence and, except as hereinafter stated, we do not disagree with the district judge’s decisions of law. We come, then, to our point of disagreement with the district court.

For the sixth claim of error, defendants Noyes and Hagemeyer charge that personal judgments should not have been entered against either of them. We agree. There is no question but that these defendants joined defendant Beirne in a plan to organize a corporation to manufacture and market, in competition with plaintiff, a product which in appearance, function and trade name was substantially a copy of plaintiff’s product. However, as to any illegality in such conduct, the district judge said, in part [151 F.Supp. 832] :

“I am of the opinion that plaintiff’s trade-mark was not infringed. The adoption by one manufacturer of the features of another’s product, common to articles of that class, does not of itself amount to unfair competition. Rathbone, Sard & Co. v. Champion Steel Range Co., 6 Cir., 189 F. 26, 37 L.R.A.,N.S., 258; West Point Manufacturing Co. v. Detroit Stamping Co., supra, [6 Cir., 222 F.2d 581, certiorari denied 350 U.S. 840, 76 S.Ct. 80, 100 L.Ed. 749].
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“The size, shape, color, and descriptive words Insect Light on the defendants’ vapor lamp were all functional and with the exception of the color, which might have been different, about the only design that could have been followed to accomplish the purposes intended. There was nothing novel or distinctive, aside from the functional uses, to which either the plaintiff’s or the defendants’ lamp could lay claim. Numerous other vapor lamps had been in existence. While the term Insecfc-O-Lite has been subjected to trade-mark, there is nothing so unusual or singular in the phrase that a court of equity should permit it to pre-empt the field to which it seeks to adapt itself. It had been in use for only a few months and could not be said to have become identified in the mind of the purchasing public to such an extent that the name had acquired a secondary meaning.
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291 F.2d 696, 130 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 186, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 4152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hagemeyer-chemical-co-inc-william-c-hagemeyer-james-c-noyes-and-ca6-1961.